The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, April 02, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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PAGE FOUR
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON. MONDAY. APRIL 2. 194S
THE BEND BULLETIN
Md CENTRAL OKEGOX PRESS
Now That the Preliminaries Are Over-
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THE OTHER EXD OF THE STICK
r, hiMiir nnmi news that is coming' out ol
Europe these days encourage the belief tnat the Germans .
are themselves experiencing somewhat the sort of punish
ment they administered so lavishly to the Dutch and Belgians ;
and French and British nearly five years ap. It must he!
educational to Germany and the Germans to be given the,
tw AeUxt mav be the result of war and tnat defeat ;
is not exclusively for those nations against which German j
There are differences, of course, which must be remem- i
bered in comparing the war of invasion fought in 1940 with ;
the war of invasion being fought in 1945. The one which isj
now going on is far vaster, far more devastating. e believe i
that it will be conclusive. The fact that it is going on is suf-;
ficient proof that the invasion of 1940 wa-i inconclusive. The
invasion of today is the penetration of a country well-pre- j
tn nwir and recel invasion. Holland. Belgium, France;
and the Eritish army which assisted them were ill-prepared.
This nha.se of the war which is turning the tables so com
pletely stemmed from no blitz attack. The tactical prepara- j
tion for entrance dwarfs the German preparation by com
parison. Multiple fanes of defense, which would have been?
quite impregnable to such an offensive as the Germans!
launched in 1940, have been neutralized one by one through!
the greater Dart of the year. No mere strafing ahead of ad-:
vancing tanks by unopposed stukas sufficed to speed the as
sault. The war industry and the transportation oi a nation
were not disintegrated by any such methods- They were,
literally battered to pieces through many months of nearly
ceaseless bombardment from the skies. The nazis had usedj
hundreds of tons of explosives; the allies used thousands of:
tons to ruin the resources of a country destined for conquest j
and to destroy it defenses. j
When this phase of the war was well advanced, and only
when it was well advanced, could the break-through be ef-j
fected. Once it was effected, the forward surge of armies has!
accelerated greatly, but at what cost or in the face of what
resistance the censorship does not permit us to know. We may i
guess at one further point of dissimilarity, however, between .,,, . . . H, n-h
Th in.hn r.t , iqja tht f r:,m.,n ,, E STORY : Cass Hapes of ! darkening the doorway. Then
tv .w. ,i, . . ui ,. u : . . 11 the local police force stops by to ; with a movement so swift
Uicu Luc nAU iwa yri a nuuic luuiiu, tivil ill iLa ull.-LfrilL : . .
resources, scarcely marred by war. ow the allies are gaining; . "ft"13 01
possession of a country where war's destruction is on every 1 S- He 13 surprised to find
hand. The Germans have been learning (let us hope thoy have! 'he Hudson party there, saying
been tearninirl the hard wav ; he has suspected prowlers on the
oeen learning; tne nam i mff for ,ml, ,jm(,. He ?hos a
Now the pattern of conquest drawn nearly five years ago; bMet hoIe m his hat rom the
is developing in Germany. Armies are splitting the invaded night before. After he leaves,
territory. The capital has been abandoned, if we may believe Charley announces that he had
most recent reports. The Hitler government has moved on,! told Cass only that afternoon who
relocating in an area far removed from the current field of : was sta,ns a.f th.e h.ouse
rnilitary operations. j T(JE SII.ExtEK
,e snau not attempt to peer into tne luture to drawl xia
Washington
Column ,
Rv Peter Edson
NEA Slit Orpoodtl
Washington, D. C Uberation
of Guam and the capture of Sai
pan and the other Marianas is
lands has given U. S. Pacific
forces not only good B-29 bases
for bombing Japan, but also good
bases for bombarding the Jap
anese people with Japanese lang
uage radio broadcasts and plane-
! dropped leaflets and newspapers
j telling them tne rcai itia m
j denied them by their war lords.
Radio Saipan, known to the Japs
'as -Voice of America," is now
I making direct broadcasts to the
jjap people eight hours a day,
! but the schedule will be around
! the clock in the near future. Op
erated jointly by Office of War
'information. Army and Navy
; Psychological Warfare divisions,
this Japanese-language Voice of
America is one of the really
unique sidelines of the war.
There nave rjeen snuu
broadcasts to Japan from San j
j Francisco since the early days of 1
I the war. Later a relay station was 1
I established at Honolulu for re-
j broadcasts, but the audience of j
' these two stations has been re- j
'strieted since short wave receiv-j
! ers are closely licensed by the Jap ;
J government. j
J Establishment of radio Saipan,
however, gives the psychological !
J warfare units a chance to go on
j the air with medium wave broad j
I casts capable of reaching the five 1
, million sets known to be in exis- j
; tence on the Japanese islands, and j
, that is an auoience worth culti-1
i vatins.
i Voice of America as broadcast
! ing in the darknes is not much from Saipan is entirely a tran-
ifun, but it helps to keep you senpuon program irura 1
, , j T Vivj whose scripts are written m New
j awake. And I did stay awake , york Was;mgtoni San Francisco
I through three cigarets, but my or Honolulu, translated into Jap-
ELKS TO INSTALL
Members of Bend LodgeNo.
i-vti d o n trik. will meet at
8 am. 'tomorrow in the Elks hall
year, It was announced today by
paii Sew. secretary. Past Exalt.
ed Ruler Hans Slagsvold will act I
installine officer. suDstitutim t
for the grand exalted ruler. .
1 n
to install officers for thensuinguoi
YOUR EYES CHANGE
with the years!
silent that it sempd unreal,
figure was in the room and had
closed the door behind him.
further comparisons or to make further contrasts. It hardly! That coffee was inordinately ; it straight through the upper
eem necessary. Figuratively, it might be suggested, Ger-! s'rong. I had had three cups of it ; pines of the open window. The
many has no future. ' and had worn a path on the bed-1 shattering glass ripped Into the
J j room rug from the bed to the win- silence as I heaved myself off the
"no ,,t .. u- 1 u , r. , i dow. The min beat dismally-on , bed. There was the soft wham of
One out of every eleven vehicles in the city of Bend was ! the roof of the north wing below, i a silencer and the swtft "blup" of
iu.ui.cu 111 iraiuc acciuent in tne city during tne year ; and I could see the beam of the
1944 . . ." The foregoing is a flat assertion found in a news i Juniper Hill air beacon as it flash
release from the safety division of the secretary irf state's ; across sky.
office and, of course, it is not true for nofxxiy knows how many ' ,,.ur"3 bo,,kon ,he bureau:
ttelvX""6 !" I"6 in Vear U'C tHink tVXSi
this safety division is doing a good job in its promotion of : affairs that trusted little to the
safety on the streets and highways but we are not going to patience of the reader, and on the
let it make any such statement regarding conditions in Bend, i ''r,t Pae a brunette clad in white
1 ' ; sat swung gently to and from
thinking was very muddy. Only
one clear thought shone beacon
line in my brain: whoever had
entered my room had an implac
aole enemv in Nicholas Trent and
and its an unconscionably long the
the ; lazy worm hat never tui-ns. With
this consoling thought 1 ten
; asleep. ,
I When I awoke, the sun was
shining and there was the odor of
sea and rain-washed earth. I was
back in bed although I didn't re
member lying down. And I should
have thought last night was a
; dream, if I hadn't been clutching
i the pistol. I liked the feeling of it.
I examined it. The layman gets
little information about the own
. ership of a pistol from staring at
its exterior. It was an unlovely
i thing with a silencer bulking over
! the chamber.
I found the bullet in the plaster
to the left of the bed, and I dug
3 coat and ! ftS
: ; and I think it would have made
dragged the man close, groping ui i ... u
for hi tMin.hanrl Immpdiatplv T , " u"c """" 'l""
found mysWf on the floor with J
har dthick forearm clamped;
aroui
A flashlight beam licked along
the wall. Hay still as a shroud.
Straining my eyes against the
curtain of blackness, I sucked in
my breath. But my nerve-taut
body craved action.
My sicaret-lighted stood on the
table at the head of my bed I
reached out, seized it. and hurled
tTo Be Continued)
All the topsoil. coal, oil and
md my wtnapipe. Fain seared - i . . . . 'nf jan
h, f -,,., :,.u,i i other organic substances on which 1 01 JdP
brain, tjoluen pinwheeu spun . iT - . j j h-ivp i
. man subsists have been laid down nave si
Bend's Yesterdays
my
before mv eyes.
Dreamily .on the fringe of con-
gallons each, valid through June
21.
-Siove: Apply local board for
oil, gas stove certificates.
VViMk, .'ml, SauiluHl: nealer
FIFTEEN YE.AR.S AGO
(April 2, 1930
tfnm Tha BulMm Hmt
Pports from Washington indi
cate that the treasury and post
office departments look favor-1 determines delivery priority from
ablv uoon a new nnxtnffin fni-;
- j u-.jiiie-i 3 wiiitrn siatcment 01
r annual ni'eds ami quantity on
Recalling that when the last 1 hand,
census was taken of Bend's popu-', FuH Oil: t'eriixl 13 iincl.1 cou
lation in 19a), there were 5,415 : pons valid through August 31.
people here, workers tmlay began :
ta take a new census here. ! ...
The state highway department ' TKOMI.SF.S RKPAY.MENT
sends a snow pUrw to the Mck'en-I st- Paul. Minn. Hpi- The West
zie pass with the hope that It Seventh stre.-t l.'SO center invol
might be opened to traffic in a;un,ariy became a lending agency
week. when a night prow ler entered the
Mr. and Mrs. Frank S. Mctl.ir-: P1'"'0 and rifled various money
vey and three children, and Mrs i1"" " acquire a total of $l.rx).
Mc Garvey's mother. Mrs. Sciib-iH" M' however, to Mrs.
ner, and Janet Moffet. comorisei K,w 1 "on. nirecinr. saying
a party en route to spend three i
weeks In California.
Loos stamns invalM. ! Zr,""! 1 Z' "TJ i tion with sunshine.
Book 3-Airplane stamps 1-2-3 ,hroat. 1 closed the book and; would My lungs uallooned
no a., ' ' ; turnd out my light. , against my ribs and black misery
SMMine: couprjns not valid un-, 1 i;iy on my biick an() j was : swamped my senses. I went limp;
less endorsed. "A" 15 coupons. 4 ! ihinUino shim iv w vr. i the forearm "rWaxfrf sllwhHv: r.il
1 A bright, sunny day with the witn a sunoen upwara tnrust, 1
i foliage thick and green and the mallcted the man's chin with the
checkered shadows of the maples back of my head. I whirled, got a
: dappling the streets. I had got bar on his arm. my fingers ciith-
into a fight with Bernard Spiegel enng over the barrel of the gun.
solely rjt cauhe was Herman. The Jxivageiy i vanned downward
by chlorophyll, the green pigment 1 islands.
in vegetation, acting m coopera
anese, then put on platters ior
shipment to Saipan.
The first big objective has been
to build up the credibility of Voice
of America. Straight news and a
little commentary has proved to
be the best vehicle. Giving the
Japanese people the news which
they have good reason to know
about or suspect, but which has
been withheld from them or dis
torted by the Jap government has
proved pretty effective.
I
; There is no direct attack on the
Japanese emperor as an individ
ual. All the blame for what is hap
pening to the Japanese people is
heaped on the Jap war lords w ho
have so grossly deceived and mis-
; led the Jap people into a losing
i war.
I Jap propagandists have tried to
i make something out of the uncon
ditional surrender demand by
playing up the idea that all Amer
! icans are beasts. It is being count
jered with broadcasts and leaflets
I building up the idea that surren
Ider isn't disgraceful and proving
it oy accounts of good treatment
soldiers and civilians who
surrendered on the liberated
j Buy National War Bonds Now:
I am very sorry I did this. There
is a day coming when I will pay."
TWENTY FIVE YEA ICS AGO i Iim,'n", ""J 'unl1'- ,:"' ''''
(April '2 19'Ht 'urn iron oxides, are Increiisinglv
Contributors to' a $35,000 fund ; usrd I,ll-rr",n,s- "lding.nl
gather in the courthouse am ' -'incs and in smoke-screen
from the Deschutes County Kair . rflf micals.
association, and se:ect Bend as;
the site for the annual event. !
A fire record is established '
when no calls are received in 46 '
days. Fire Chief Tom Carlon re-;
ports... I
Mrs. D. W. Davidson is a Bend
shopper from Terrebonne. j
R. M. Sanders buvs the R. II 1
i-oope home on Division street.
A. W. Austin of Dcschules. is a
Bend business visitor.
Ration Calendar
I'rorewi Food: T!ook 4 - Blue
ftamrffl C2 through G2 valid
through April 2S: 2 through M2
valid through June 2: N2 through
S2 valid through Juno 30; T2
through X2 valid through -tulv 31.
Meat. Butter, Cheese; Book 4
Red stamps '15 through X5 vnltrt
through April :8; Y3 through
valid through June 2; K2 thmuph
J2 valid throuch June 30: K
through P2 valid through July 31. 1
Sugar: Book 4 -Sugar stamp
35 valid through June. New sugar i
(ImLm wi
MEAT
J WITH THE I
bitterness of Ihe first World War
was still very close to us. I was
flailing away vigorously but in
effectually when my father came
along and stopped the fight. j
1 he war, he had explained, was '
over. People should not hate one
annth.T. They should love one an-!
other. There would never again '
he wars such as the last war. Cor- i
tajnly if the war had taught us j
anythirg. it had taught us that, i
Right there is whore t stopped
my dreaming. Because of the pal
pable falsity of that l.wt state
ment I opened my eyes. Some
thing was wrong. Across the floor
of my bedroom was a symmetri
cal line of pale yellow thai didn't
belong there. It ran diagonally
away from the doorsill and made
a broadening pillar on the carpet.
Someone was softly opening, the
dor o my room. I saw his shadow
Maytag
ervice
n
Cienillnn Maytag
I'artt, prompt,
guarantiMl serv
ice. Factory
trained, SO years
experience.
ELMER
HUDSON
Telephone 274
iZ 1 Kansas Ecnd
Fear and anger lent me strength
and I took up another notch.
Theer was a sudden grunt of pain
and the pistol came loose In my
hand. " ;
I rolled clear and saw his
shadow in the doorway. He looked
big and that's all I saw. An ex
cellent target, but I did not shoot.
I know by now how ready a man
must bo to kill, yet I could not
bring myself to it. Then he was
gone.
In the corridor, the door to the
al)oining room was open. I saw
the curtains fluttering inward
from an open window. Outside
I here was nothing but an easy
drop to an nutstiM roof a mans
height from the ground, blue
shailows in the darkness, and in
the fky a placid, beautiful, but
quile unilltitninaling sickle moon,
wluih had appeared alter the
ram.
1 went back to my room, put
on my robe and slippers and kick
el the broken glass into a csirner.
I turned out rr.y light again, tilted
a chair against the wal lacing the
doar. took our my cigarets. and
laid the pistol on my knee. Smok-
SOMETHING!
FOR YOUR EYES!
SOMETHING!
FOR YOUR EARS!
SOMETHING!
- FOR YOUR HEART!
CARMEN MIRANDA'S
DANCE-DAZZLING
TUNE TORRID
' TECHNICOLOR
MNSiCAL HIT
"Something For
The Boys"
CAPITOL-Wed., Tbu., Fri., Sat.
3
FOUNTAIN
SERVICE
LUNCHEONS
HOME-MADE PIES
e
SPORTSMEN'S
HEADQUARTERS
DOUTHIT'S
Bend
Abstract Co.
Title Insurance Abstracts
Walt Peak Phone 174
DIAMONDS
The quickest way
to lose $25 . . .
Cash Your $100
War Bond
A. T. NIEBERGALL
Jeweler
Next H Capful Th!r
WATCHES
HORNBECK
Typewriter Co.
Authoriied Agent or
ROYAL
Sales and Service
Roytype Ribbons and Carbon
K. C. Allen Adding Machines
All Mak TvneWTtrrs
Serviced
Phone 1 2 1 22 Oregon Ave.
"FOclES AND HIS FRIENDS
SOUr?. LVTN SlTl'ATIOM
IS CSriTiCAL. LARD.' WM'
hiME SOU NEGLECTED '
rr so?
Just like any other part of
your body, your eyes tend
to change as the years roll
by. That is why the glasses
you obtained some years
ago may not necessarily be
the right glasses for you
today.
Check np . . . have your
eyes examined this week.
Then if you need new lenses,
your prescription can b
filled in Soft-Lite Lenses
the good looking flesh toned
lenses which scientifically
cut down glare give greater
comfort. They are ideal for
modern living conditions.
UES X
OPTICS L
014 WAlTEST
END-OREGOM
This Much You Must
Do At Home!
but the rest you can send to the laundry. -
Literally, all of baby's clothes, and your
own plus your household linens, rugs, hubby's
work clothes, etc., will be washed in our modern
plant more thoroughly and safely than you can
do it yourself.
Send it to the laundry for safe and econ
- omical washing, and save yourself many hours
r of time to devote to other pursuits.
Bend-Troy Laundry
60 Kansas
Phone 146
Brooks-Sccmlon Quality
Pine Lumber
Brooks-Scanlon Lumber
Company Inc.
i . v. . V I
r. y
I GueSS IVET 3-M TOO POSY iScMD
"SENDINO THE SALS - WITi-l , ING
MY OaXrJiN&, MISSTALSOT: J Tug
; v -s- , -i GiclS
rC : '
IMA.TS JUST JlVE TALK
FOR. TAfelNG- TABK CUT
t. ihis WCRLO
vVAVMA Mc"AK VOU
A SAMPLE? MEAM
HERE
R MFRPitl BLOSSEP
i l r rti
CERT SMALL 1 SWIM IT ID VOU
IT i
s
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